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Charedim demand Hebrew, not Yiddish, census

Census to include questions in Yiddish for first time in 110 years — but the Orthodox argue it should be in Hebrew

March 4, 2010 16:04
2 min read

Q: Makht a tsetl fun ale nemen, arayn-gerekhnt aykh aleyn un arayngerekhnt kinder, eyfelekh un lokatorn.
Including yourself, list all the names, including children, babies and lodgers.
Q: Vi kern zikh on di bney-bayes do eyner mitn tsveytn?
How are members of this household related to each other?

After a 110-year absence, the appearance of Yiddish in the 2011 Census has provoked controversy among the strictly Orthodox Stamford Hill community - who would prefer it to be Hebrew.

Stamford Hill community leaders Rabbi Avraham Pinter and Ita Symons decried the measure, achieved after a lengthy consultation process between the Office for National Statistics (ONS), the Board of Deputies and the Institute for Jewish Policy Research, as "tokenism" and "patronising" respectively.

Rabbi Pinter, head of Yesodey Hatorah School, said: "This smacks of political correctness and tokenism. The number who can't fill out a form in English is quite small.